The knockout round schedule at the 2014 Olympics is set — and there are a couple surprising names on the docket.

Latvia, who had to qualify for the tournament, and Slovenia, in its first-ever Games, won their play-in games on Tuesday, beating Austria and Switzerland, respectively. Also advancing, albeit less unexpectedly, were Russia, to play Finland, and the Czech Republic, who will face the United States.

So, with that said, here's the full schedule for the quarterfinals. It begins in a little more than 12 hours.

Sweden vs. Slovenia, 3 a.m. ET, NBC Sports. The Slovenes are the surprise of the tournament ( here, learn a few things about them ) and they're been a blast, but Sweden — injuries or not — is going to be a much different beast than Austria. Henrik Lundqvist has looked himself, and the Swedish power play, Erik Karlsson in particular, has been something to behold.

Finland vs. Russia, 7:30 am ET, NBC Sports. This could be the most competitive game of the day. Russia may have come into the tournament more highly regarded than Finland, but their goal-scoring has been MIA for much of it . The Finns' forward group is decimated by injuries, but they play their system perfectly and, in Tuukka Rask, have a goalie capable of beating anyone at any time. Russia learned this last week during their 1-0 shootout win.

Canada vs. Latvia, noon, MSNBC. Most had penciled the Swiss in against Canada, thanks largely to the play of goaltender Jonas Hiller, but Latvia had different ideas on Tuesday. Turns out that Edgars Masalskis was the goalie to watch. In any case, a loss by Canada here would be disastrous — and really, any perceived struggles on their part has been overblown. Defensively, they've been great.

USA vs Czech Republic, noon ET, USA Network. Advancing wasn't as easy as it initally looked to be for the Czechs, who struggled to put away Slovakia despite at 4-0 lead. They're a difficult team to figure out with a weird roster that opted out of carrying several useful NHLers. The U.S., meanwhile, looked great in group play — fast, skilled, ready for the big ice and eminently capable of beating Ondrej Pavelec.